“I know.” Willow’s eyes softened. I shook my head, my breath shaky. “It’s like she’s trying to erase my mom.
And he’s letting her.”
Willow grabbed my hand, squeezing it tight. “She can’t erase your mom, Summer. She can try, but Lisa will never be her.”
I nodded, biting my lip so hard it hurt.
Then I exhaled and squared my shoulders. “Come on,” I muttered, moving toward another rack of dresses. “Let’s find Lisa something worthy of her.”
That night, after dinner, everyone went off in their own directions.
And when the house fell asleep, I made the switch. My mother’s dress stayed locked away in my room. The cheap replica that Willow and I had found took its place.
The cheap replica that was about to be soaked, dried, and weakened over the next few nights. Lisa had absolutely no idea. She thought that I was being sweet.
Dutiful. The morning of the wedding, guests filled the venue. Lisa beamed as she slipped into the fake dress, blissfully unaware.
“You did such a good job with steaming this dress, Summer,” she said. “Now, hand me my bouquet, and let’s go on our way! Your father is waiting for us at the end of the aisle.”
Being one of the bridesmaids, I walked down the aisle first.
I locked eyes with my father for a brief moment before looking away. When had he become a stranger? I thought to myself.
The music began, and Lisa started to walk down the aisle. I stood there, watching her. Lisa made her grand entrance, smug as ever.
She practically floated down the aisle, her veil trailing behind her, her hands clutching my dad’s like she’d won some twisted game. And just as she reached him…
Rip. A gasp echoed through the room.
The fabric at her side split clean open. Lisa froze. Then, as she moved to cover herself with her hand, there was another rip.
One sleeve tore, the lace unraveling like a cheap costume. Beads started popping off, skittering across the floor like tiny white lies coming undone. I had soaked the thrift store dress in water and let it dry overnight, weakening the fabric just enough.
I had done that every night leading up to the wedding. The moment Lisa moved too much, it was bound to disintegrate. Just like now…
“What’s happening?!” Lisa shrieked.
I stepped forward, arms crossed. “I guess that’s what happens when you wear something old…”
“Your mother’s dress?! Why didn’t you tell me?
Why didn’t you warn me that we needed a lining or something?”
“Oh, Lisa. That’s not my mom’s dress.”
Her head snapped toward me, face burning red. “What did you do?” she bellowed.
“I wouldn’t trust you with something that precious, Lisa. So, I got you a little… replacement.”
The entire venue fell into stunned silence. My dad looked mortified.
Guests exchanged murmurs, watching as Lisa clutched at the falling-apart dress. Children giggled behind their hands. Lisa’s perfect moment was coming undone.
And me? I walked out of that ceremony with my head held high. Lisa refused to speak to me after that.
My dad? Oh, he was furious. But I told him the truth.
“You actually allowed her to wear Mom’s dress?” I said. “Even after you knew that Mom left it for me? I had to do something!
You gave me no choice!”
“I’m sorry, Summer,” he said. “She bulldozed her way into it. It was my fault.
I was looking at your mom’s wedding dress… I was feeling nostalgic. And Lisa walked in on that moment. She wanted the dress the moment she saw it.”
“And you didn’t stop her?
You didn’t help her see sense?”
My dad shook his head. In the end, their wedding happened. Sure, it wasn’t as planned.
No big ceremony. No grand dress. Just them, at a courthouse, in silence.
I didn’t even go. And my mom’s dress? It’s still mine.
Waiting for the day I wear it. I may add an extra layer of lining now that I know my way around wedding dresses and preserving them. What would you have done?
Source: amomama







